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Showing 61–67 of 67 results

  • Twenty-one Ghazals

    by Gulnar Ali Balata $18.00
    Poetry from Červená Barva Press
    Translated from Uzbek

    Alisher Navoiy, or Nizam-al-Din ‘Ali-Shir, a fifteenth century poet, mystic and artist, is reawakened in Daly’s sublime translations. True to their spirit yet infused with a modern idiom, these ghazals tremble on the tongue, sparkle on the sheaf.

  • Two Colors of the Soul: The Selected Poetry of Dmytro Pavlychko

    by Dmytro Pavlychko $17.00
    Poetry from Červená Barva Press
    Translated from Ukrainian

    In the tradition of poet-statesmen Neruda and Seferis, Pavlychko writes about his twin passions, love and history. Courageous, direct, and plain-spoken, he has long deserved a place on the international literary stage and Michael Naydan’s skillfully edited selections should confirm it.
    — Askold Melnyczuk

  • Voroshilovgrad

    by Serhiy Zhadan $15.95
    Fiction from Deep Vellum Publishing

    Easy Rider meets Pedro Páramo in this darkly funny, fast-paced road novel that barrels through eastern Ukraine’s ravaged industrial landscape.

  • Whipstitches

    by Randi Ward $18.00
    Poetry from MadHat Press

    “These poems are never merely pastoral, and their emotional range belies their small size. Here are poems that move from the lyrical and humorous to the acerbic, the rueful, and even the creepy. ‘Every little whipstitch,’ we can hear Randi Ward’s haunted and haunting voice moving between worlds like a wily shape-shifter.” — Maggie Anderson

  • Who is Martha

    by Marjana Gaponenko $9.99$15.99
    Fiction from New Vessel Press
    Translated from German

    A rollicking tale about facing death with verve and style, richly told with great feeling and historical depth.

  • Without God: Michel Houellebecq and Materialist Horror

    by Louis Betty $29.95$64.95
    Literary study from Penn State University Press

    Michel Houellebecq is France’s most famous and controversial living novelist. Focusing on Houellebecq’s complicated relationship with religion, Louis Betty shows that the novelist, who is at best agnostic, “is a deeply and unavoidably religious writer.”

  • Yugoslavia, My Fatherland

    by Goran Vojnović $12.56
    Fiction from Istros Books
    Translated from Slovene

    When Vladan Borojević googles the name of his father Nedelko, a former officer in the Yugoslav People’s Army supposedly killed in the civil war after the decay of Yugoslavia, he unexpectedly discovers a dark family secret.

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